When does a photograph become an image.

What about a HDR taken from a single exposure RAW file :shrug:

I'd agree that a well shot HDR can actually be more realistic than a single exposure shot, if used in the correct way and the processing done correctly (but this is a totally different discussion really)

still blending different exposures
 
think you'll find black and white film is not in camera processing :lol:

It's not too far stretched as an analogue (in the old fashioned sense of the word) of digital in-camera processing.

You choose a film for its tone, colour and grain properties, same as you'd select a particular sharpening and tone curve on a digital camera prior to capturing a JPEG file (if you're that way inclined).

Then you apply your favourite development and printing (if it's negative film) processes as an analogue of Post-Processing in the digital realm.
 
It's not too far stretched as an analogue (in the old fashioned sense of the word) of digital in-camera processing.

You choose a film for its tone, colour and grain properties, same as you'd select a particular sharpening and tone curve on a digital camera prior to capturing a JPEG file (if you're that way inclined).

Then you apply your favourite development and printing (if it's negative film) processes as an analogue of Post-Processing in the digital realm.

This ^
 
think you'll find black and white film is not in camera processing :lol:

But, by your own definition, it is sufficiently removed from reality to be no longer a photograph.

You really should think things through more you know.
 
But, by your own definition, it is sufficiently removed from reality to be no longer a photograph.

You really should think things through more you know.

Not been here long:lol:

You'll get used to it. He'll cling onto the slimmest thread of an argument rather than admit he was talking out of his .....
 
Taken this evening: Double exposure of a bus at rest then pulling away from its stop, made from two shots taken about ten seconds apart and then layered together in Photoshop. Could have done it in camera if my G2 had a double exposure facility like some of my film cameras.

Not a photograph done either way, apparently :D


MEC 31 leaving London Bridge by cybertect, on Flickr
 
Taken this evening: Double exposure of a bus at rest then pulling away from its stop, made from two shots taken about ten seconds apart and then layered together in Photoshop. Could have done it in camera if my G2 had a double exposure facility like some of my film cameras.

Not a photograph done either way, apparently :D


MEC 31 leaving London Bridge by cybertect, on Flickr

maybe a new thread, 'this is not a photograph'?
 
I thought we saw in colour?

Do we? A photographic image is in no way representative of how we see. There's no foveation, we don't see motion blur usually, cameras don't saccade as you pan and binocular vision tells you a photograph or TV is flat, even if the image on it has a huge depth-of-field.

Surely an image is photographic if it:
  1. is created by reflected light from an event falling on a light sensitive receptor
  2. uses a dark box and aperture (NB not necesarilly a camera c.f. Ann Hamilton)

So even photomontages are photographic in nature.

How far you can move away from the original images is open to debate.
 
Taken this evening: Double exposure of a bus at rest then pulling away from its stop, made from two shots taken about ten seconds apart and then layered together in Photoshop. Could have done it in camera if my G2 had a double exposure facility like some of my film cameras.

Not a photograph done either way, apparently :D


MEC 31 leaving London Bridge by cybertect, on Flickr

lol ...damn it if this isn't the narrowest debatable line.

I guess its just in for me, given my personal 'other' photographer guide rule above, if someone besides you had shot the same whole exposure in a single shot they would have the same reality as content. IE a parked bus driving off from A to B.

Do we? A photographic image is in no way representative of how we see. There's no foveation, we don't see motion blur usually, cameras don't saccade as you pan and binocular vision tells you a photograph or TV is flat, even if the image on it has a huge depth-of-field.

Surely an image is photographic if it:
  1. is created by reflected light from an event falling on a light sensitive receptor
  2. uses a dark box and aperture (NB not necesarilly a camera c.f. Ann Hamilton)

So even photomontages are photographic in nature.

How far you can move away from the original images is open to debate.


Aye this is what we're debating...how far?

I agree with your list.

We do see in colour though don't we, we use our foveation type vision to scan scenes reflected light and build continuously refreshing colour mental images, that we can see detail within if we look in the right direction. And a photograph is not that dissimilar when viewed in the same way. Its those same seen colour shades we see with our eys we've now listed and labelled and use in colour profiles, old and new, for everything.
Like couldn't we say HDR is closer to how we actually see than ever before, because they contain details that the eye could see in reality, if we where to look directly at each point as we can/could do in reality.
 
Do we? A photographic image is in no way representative of how we see. There's no foveation, we don't see motion blur usually, cameras don't saccade as you pan and binocular vision tells you a photograph or TV is flat, even if the image on it has a huge depth-of-field.

Surely an image is photographic if it:

[*]is created by reflected light from an event falling on a light sensitive receptor
[*]uses a dark box and aperture (NB not necesarilly a camera c.f. Ann Hamilton)


So even photomontages are photographic in nature.

How far you can move away from the original images is open to debate.

Good post.
 
Phil Young said:
That wasn't the debate.

The previous poster said it looks too far removed from the scene.

Sticking pics together just makes a bigger image.
 
Pookeyhead said:
But, by your own definition, it is sufficiently removed from reality to be no longer a photograph.

You really should think things through more you know.

Not really since you are purposefully using a specific medium. You are not adding or removing post capture.

If we follow your thinking based on my definition - ansel Adams wasn't a photographer but just an over rated analogue image maker ;)

You'll have to change the title the courses you teach as they are no longer accurate description :(
 
Phil V said:
I thought we saw in colour?

Yes cones and rods see different wavelengths and have different sensitivities to light. Rod cells are almost exclusively used at night when colour disappears

And dogs don't see I black and white either they are essential red/green colour blind.
 
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Musicman said:
Taken this evening: Double exposure of a bus at rest then pulling away from its stop, made from two shots taken about ten seconds apart and then layered together in Photoshop. Could have done it in camera if my G2 had a double exposure facility like some of my film cameras.

Not a photograph done either way, apparently :D

http://www.flickr.com/photos/cybertect/8245813370/
MEC 31 leaving London Bridge by cybertect, on Flickr

Used to have a Ricoh camera that did this. Made ghost images with it.
 
Does being on the forum a long time equal greater wisdom then?:thinking:

read the thread in context and you'll see that phil was saying that to explain to David that POAH will cling to a tiny thread of an argument.
 
read the thread in context and you'll see that phil was saying that to explain to David that POAH will cling to a tiny thread of an argument.

Is there a Joe > English translate facility anywhere?

:)
 
interesting discussion this.
it's been done before but I always like the points of view

Why shouldn't it be limiting, where are you going to draw the line?

I'm not for one second suggesting the image should have to reflect reality, it just should be done in one exposure.

on the above a friend took some photos about female body image, overlaying two images with different lighting setups and then blended them.
This was two different exposures.
is that still a photograph?? well I'd argue that it was as she did it by double exposing on a medium format camera. not a pixel in sight!
 
joescrivens said:
read the thread in context and you'll see that phil was saying that to explain to David that POAH will cling to a tiny thread of an argument.

And doesn't necessarily have to believe a point to argue it either.

But we love him anyway. :love:
 
on the above a friend took some photos about female body image, overlaying two images with different lighting setups and then blended them.
This was two different exposures.
is that still a photograph?? well I'd argue that it was as she did it by double exposing on a medium format camera. not a pixel in sight!

According to my own opinions, then no, it's an image, not a photograph.

It may be easier if I said that "Photo Journalists" are the ones who would exclusively only produce true photographs, to do otherwise would not be "Photo Journalism".
 
age maker ;)

You'll have to change the title the courses you teach as they are no longer accurate description :(

You don't know the titles of the courses I teach :)



Anyway... so a process that records the scene before it unfaithfully (removing colour) is a photograph, but if a process changes it from reality POST capture it's no longer a photograph?

Pretty thin distinction to make if you ask me.
 
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